Skadarlija

Accommodation at city center. Friendly staff and pleasant atmosphere.
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Consejos de personas locales

Jelena

February 16, 2020

Old Bohemian street in Belgrade, live Serbian traditional music, great food and drinks, often overflown with tourists but interesting to see if first time in Belgrade

Arman

April 3, 2020

Music, culture, history.

Vesna

November 6, 2019

Domaća kuhinja i lep provod

Jovana

April 25, 2020

Car-free and paved with bumpy cobblestones, Skadarlija has been a bohemian haunt since the 1800s and is Belgrade’s answer to Montmartre. Like its Parisian counterpart, Skadarlija’s glory days were in the early 1900s when famous but cash-strapped Serbian singers, musicians, writers and poets lived,…

Aleksandar

December 6, 2019

Odlicna hrana,starogradska muzika

Dragana

January 28, 2020

Skadarlija is a vintage street, and is known as the main bohemian quarter of Belgrade, similar to Paris' Montmartre. Here you can feel the spirit of Belgrade, restaurants offers our national meal, music and drink :)

Vesna

February 11, 2020

Skadarlija is one of the oldest and most beautiful streets of Belgrade, There is a very large number of restaurants serving, enjoying old-town songs, a glass of drinks and the best food.

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“Restaurant Kalemegdan Terrace is located in the most beautiful part of Belgrade, on Kalemegdan, fully integrated into the ambience of the fort.A prestigious restaurant with a terrace and fantastic views of the mouth of the Sava River into the Danube, War Island and Zoo. Close to Ruzice Church and St. Petka.”

“The largest Orthodox Church in the Balkan region, and the second largest in the world, St Sava is an ever-present monument in Serbia’s capital. High on the Vračar plateau, you can see the church’s white granite and marble walls from any approach to Belgrade, while the 50 bells that sound noon ring out across the city. The temple is built on the site where the Ottoman Grand Vizier Sinan Pasha burned St Sava’s relics after his icon had graced flags during a Serbian uprising in 1594. Construction began in 1935, 340 years after that event, and ended in 1989. The biggest challenge was raising the central dome, all 4,000 tons of which was assembled on the ground and hoisted into place. ”

“This island on the Sava has been reclaimed and turned into a peninsula, and is somewhere for Belgradians to let their hair down and be active. Even though Ada Ciganlija is in the middle of the city, it has been left to nature, and is still cloaked with mature elm and oak forest. On the south side the Sava is impounded, forming the Savsko jezero lake. On any given summer’s day Ada Ciganlija is thronged with people jogging, rowing and kayaking on the lake, playing golf, tennis, basketball or just basking in the greenery. But it’s the pebble beach that is the main draw, known as “Belgrade’s Seaside” and traced with bars and restaurants. These provide picnic tables and deckchairs and are open into the night. ”